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Ovid

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Ovid. THE Metamorphoses . Life of ovid. 20 BC- publishes first book of poetry . Born March 20, 43 BC. Statue of Ovid, Constanta, Romania (Ettore Ferrari, 1887). 8 AD- exiled by Augustus to Romania. 17 AD- Ovid dies in exile. Works of Ovid. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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OVID THE METAMORPHOSES
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Page 1: Ovid

OVIDTHE METAMORPHOSES

Page 2: Ovid

LIFE OF OVIDBorn March 20, 43 BC

20 BC- publishes first book of poetry

8 AD- exiled by Augustus to Romania

17 AD- Ovid dies in exile

Statue of Ovid, Constanta, Rom

ania (Ettore Ferrari, 1887)

Page 3: Ovid

WORKS OF OVID• Amores- love poems, often shorter, focus on a particular mistress• Heroides- letters from epic and mythic women to their husbands• Medicamina Faciei Feminae- a comedic book about women’s cosmetics and

beauty tips• Ars Amatoria- poems about how to make love (to people that you are not

married to)• Remedia Amoris- the sequel to Ars Amatoria, about how to end relationships• Fasti- poems about feasts and festivals and the myths behind them• Metamorphoses- poem of epic length, compilation of different myths• Tristia- sorrowful poems about life in exile• Epistolae ex Ponto- letters written by Ovid to family in friends in Rome seeking

to end his exile

Page 4: Ovid

THE METAMORPHOSES15 books

Tales within tales

Creating of the world through glory of Rome

Contrasts charming/violent, grotesque/hilarious

No coherent plot

Complex, flexible structure evident

Each story has a transformation

Structure, theme, meaning cohesive within books and individual myths

Compilation of mythsFountain of Diana and Actaeon, Royal Palace at Caserta, Naples (Persico, Burnelli, Solari), late 18th century

Page 5: Ovid

Sources of Myth

• Oral traditions mentioned by Homer• Theogony (Birth of the Gods) by Hesiod• Tragedy- Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides• Earlier and Later Greet poets: Pindar,

Bacchylides, Apollonius of Rhodes, Callimachus

• Roman model of combining myth and history: Livy, Catullus, Virgil

• Ovid picks, alters and twists the original myths into non-canonical “modern” versions

• For many myths, only Ovid’s version survives while the “real” version is lost

Tereus Confronted with the Head of his Son Itys, Rubens, 1638

Page 6: Ovid

INFLUENCE- SHAKESPEARE

By 1483, translated into all Romance languages and

English

Midsummer Night’s Dream – play within a play,

Pyramus and Thisbe

Star Crossed lover examples in Ovid inspire Romeo

and Juliet

Thisbe- John Waterhouse, 1909

Page 7: Ovid

INFLUENCE- LATER POETS

Tales of lovers and wonders inspire courtly

poets and Arthurian legends

Influence style, themes of English poets

Spenser, Milton

Oscar Wilde- references to Metamorphoses and

Fasti

Narcissus- Caravaggio, 1599

Page 8: Ovid

APOLLO AND DAPHNE

Apollo and Daphne, Antonio del Pollaiolo, 1470.

Apollo and Daphne- Bernini, 1625

Page 9: Ovid

FALL OF ICARUS

Fall of Icarus- Jacob Peter Gowy, 1635

Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, Bruegel, 1558

Page 10: Ovid

PYGMALIONMade into play by George Bernard Shaw 1914Film adaptation- 1938Transformed into My Fair Lady starring Audrey Hepburn 1964Transformed (again) into Pretty Woman starring Julia Roberts, 1990Inspired Vertigo, directed by Alfred Hitchcock 1958

Page 11: Ovid

ORPHEUSBlack Orpheus (1959) –set at Carnaval in Rio De Janeiro

Orpheus Descending- play by Tennessee Williams, set in 1940s Mississippi

made into film The Fugitive Kind in 1959 starring Marlon Brando

Orphic Trilogy directed by Jean Cocteau

The Blood of a Poet (1930)

Orpheus (1950)

Testament of Orpheus (1960)


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